Management
in sentence
2016 examples of Management in a sentence
As an old rock&roll road dog who played for years and later went into production and
management
of younger rock bands, I think this movie has a lot to say on many levels.
The director, in the commentary on the DVD, tells why this occurred and that was basically due to a change of
management
at MGM shortly after this movie was released.
Harris comes home to arrange for a long-distance
management
of his grandfather's real estate business, and discovers along the way that there is more to life than business.
Making it about anger
management
where Nicholson is a psychiatrist with a short temper himself and Sandler is his neurotic patient with repressed anger is a great premise.
This implies a significant gap in diabetes
management
for a large portion of the population.
Casalud also created an online information
management
system to coordinate patient care and referrals, and to manage the supply of necessary medicines.
For example, with more start-ups, it will be even harder for each of them to find
management
talent and the right employees.
If it were fully implemented, which is unlikely, it would constitute a revolution in risk
management
in the US similar to that of the creation of Social Security in 1934.
Talent
management
has gone from being an art to a science, as organizations have applied big data and supply-chain techniques to recruiting and retention.
For example, given the difficulty of staying up to speed with changing technology, firms are increasingly outsourcing information-technology
management
to third-party experts.
We have seen Enron-style fraud from corporate management, Arthur Anderson-style smoke and mirrors from accountants, and now Putnam Funds-style market-timing irregularities from mutual funds.
This amount, akin to a modest
management
fee, is simply not a dominating consideration for investors.
Still, emergency
management
efforts will struggle to keep pace with the havoc wrought by climate change, owing to a dangerous disconnect between knowledge and action, even as the scientific evidence piles up.
To make matters worse, the White House’s proposed cuts to the National Weather Service and its loosening of environmental and zoning regulations will further impede disaster
management.
The first is the
management
of the transition to Afghan control, which depends on an orderly withdrawal of American and NATO forces by 2014.
All can work – but only with good
management.
As efforts to improve the
management
of electricity from fluctuating sources yield further advances, the cost of solar power will continue to fall.
Yet the ACCEPT report may provide useful insight into the question, by highlighting how state
management
and economic liberalization interact.
Instead, the keys to growth and development appeared to lie beyond an increase in capital intensity as measured by capital-output ratios: skills, education, technology broadly understood, and improvements in organizational
management.
There appears to be a link between this precipitous drop in the average duration of stock holdings and the phenomenon of the so-called “ownerless corporation,” whereby shareholders have little incentive to impose discipline on
management.
Moreover, an intrinsic and often neglected problem is how to divide
management
of aid-and-trade schemes among international and domestic institutions.
My colleague at Harvard, Matt Andrews, has documented the failure of public financial
management
reforms designed to prevent graft.
And the reasons for these failures are not specific to financial
management.
As Harvard’s Lant Pritchett, Michael Woolcock, and Andrews argue, when inept organizations adopt “best practices” such as financial
management
systems and procurement rules, they become too distracted by decision-distorting protocols to do what they were established to do.
Government intervention in benchmark prices can be justified in the name of macroeconomic
management
or regulatory action to improve the provision of public goods and services.
Like markets generally, bond markets can be captured by a popular narrative (or what might euphemistically be called the
management
of expectations) that overstates the prospects of a certain outcome.
Africa has long struggled with urban water and wastewater
management.
In building effective systems for water and wastewater management, cities had adequate investment funds and the relevant expertise.
In Africa, cities’ financial and
management
capacities are already overwhelmed.
As a result, water and wastewater
management
has often fallen by the wayside, with policymakers focusing on water-related issues only when droughts and floods occur.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Economic
Financial
Would
Countries
Crisis
Water
Global
Could
Other
About
Should
Investment
There
Growth
Public
Government
Better
Under